[NYTr] 10 Million in US Busted for Pot: Enough is Enough

All the News That Doesn't Fit nytr at blythe-systems.com
Tue Oct 2 20:09:54 EDT 2007


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AlterNet - Oct 1, 2007
http://www.alternet.org/story/63988/

10 Million Americans Busted for Pot: Enough is Enough

By Paul Armentano

What would cops do without weed? For one thing, they'd sure spend a lot
less time arresting and processing petty pot violators. How much time?
For starters, however long it took to bust the estimated 739,000
Americans arrested for minor pot possession in 2006.

That's according to the FBI's Uniform Crime Report, which reported last
week that a record 829,625 Americans were arrested for violating
marijuana laws last year. Of those arrested, 89 percent of those were
charged with simple pot possession -- the highest annual total ever
recorded and nearly three times the number of citizens busted 15 years
ago.

Yet to hear local law enforcement spin it, busting small-time potheads
isn't their priority. The record number of busts, they claim, is simply
a reflection that record numbers of Americans are now smoking pot.

But don't tell Drug Czar John Walters that. After all, the czar just
claimed earlier this month -- at a press conference announcing the
release of the federal Office of Applied Studies (OAS) 2006 National
Survey on Drug Use and Health -- that pot use has been declining for
the better part of the past five years.

Predictably, both the cops and the drug czar are playing fast and loose
with the facts. Yes, in fact more Americans are now admittedly consuming
pot today than in 1991 (so much for the past 15 years of the so-called
"war on drugs"), but this increase is hardly proportional to the
dramatic spike in overall pot arrests.

As for Walter's comments, while the survey did indeed report a minor
decline in adolescents' self-reported use of pot, it further reported a
minor uptick in the total number of Americans who report using marijuana
regularly, from 14.6 million in 2005 to 14.8 million in 2006.

Of course, a less than 2 percent increase in pot users from '05 to '06
doesn't explain why pot arrests jumped more than five percent from a
then-record 786,545 to today's total. Or why the overall number of
annual pot arrests has gone up every consecutive year but two for the
past 16 years.

Perhaps the explanation is two-fold. It's plausible that the federal
government is -- and always has -- greatly underestimated the number of
Americans who use pot. (Does anyone really believe that cops are busting
-- on average -- five percent of all pot smokers each year?) It's also
plausible that an outgrowth of the ever-growing number of cops on the
street (and citizens' increasing number of interactions with them) is
inevitably leading to more and more pot arrests. However, regardless of
the explanation, it seems remiss for police and politicians not to
acknowledge this growing trend and its burdensome fiscal and perhaps
even cultural implications.

The bottom line: Since 1990 over 10.4 million Americans -- predominantly
young people under age 30 -- have been busted for pot. Thousands have
been disenfranchised, tens of thousands have been unnecessarily sent to
"drug treatment," hundreds of thousands have lost their eligibility for
student aid, and perhaps an entire generation (or two) has been
alienated to believe that the police are an instrument of their
oppression rather than their protection. These are the tangible results
of the government's stepped up war on pot -- results that go beyond the
FBI's record numbers, and it's high time that politicians and the
general public began taking notice.

[Paul Armentano is the senior policy analyst for the NORML Foundation in
Washington, D.C.]

) 2007 Independent Media Institute. All rights reserved.



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